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''Britains Deetail'' toy soldiers were a popular product for retail stores in England in the 1970s and 1980s. Manufactured in England by W. Britain, they were plastic figures on Zamak metal bases; an idea to keep the soldiers from falling down. In the early 1990s production moved to China. Britains still manufacture some models with different painting to the originals.〔http://www.wbritain.com/products.cfm?catID=22〕 Figures from other moulds are now manufactured in Argentina by DSG Plastic Toy Soldiers.〔http://www.dsgplastictoysoldiers.com/〕 ==Development== In 1971 Britains began phasing out its plastic Herald Miniatures that had been produced in Hong Kong since 1966 with Hong Kong Herald ceasing operation in 1976. The new Deetail figures were moulded in PVC plastic rather than polythene that enabled separate arms could be glued on giving poses previously unavailable.〔p.121 Cole, Peter ''Suspended Animation: An Unauthorised History of Herald & Britains Plastic Figures'' 1997 Plastic Warrior〕 The rectangular metal base that enabled the figures to stand better than other plastic figures paid homage to Britains' metal figures as well as being thought by consumers to be of "better value" due to the weight of the figures.〔p.123 Ibid〕 The first figures chosen for Deetail were World War II American and German soldiers. Sculptor Rod Cameron rented uniforms from Berman's and Nathan's theatrical costumes with Cameron giving model Les Harden his air rifle to pose with.〔p.124 Ibid〕 In 1976 Britains developed Super Deetail, an overmoulding process where different coloured plastics came together in one figure. The first of these were a set of modern paratroopers in red berets, though the first set of figures that included walking with a rifle and holding a light machine gun were redesigned into different poses. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Britains Deetail」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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